Epitaph
Appearance
(Redirected from An Epitaph)
- An Epitaph, a poem by William Blake (Come knock your heads against this stone)
- Epitaph, a poem by George Gordon Byron (Posterity will ne'er survey)
- Epitaph, a poem by Thomas Carew (The Lady Mary Villiers lies)
- Epitaph, a poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Stop, Christian Passer-by!—Stop, Child of God)
- An Epitaph, a poem by Countee Cullen (For Amy Lowell)
- Epitaph, a 1917 poem by E. E. Cummings (Tumbling-hair / picker of buttercups)
- An Epitaph, a poem by Edmond Dallier and translated by Toru Dutt (A fearless, mild and faithful friend lies here)
- Epitaph, a poem by Emily Dickinson (Step lightly on this narrow spot!)
- Epitaph, a poem by Ralph Waldo Emerson (Bethink, poor heart, what bitter kind of jest)
- Epitaph, a poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (As a boy, reserved and naughty)
- Epitaph, a poem by Joseph Lee (Where the long trench twines snake-like)
- An Epitaph, a poem by Walter de la Mare (Last, Stone, a little yet)
- An Epitaph, a poem by Herman Melville (When Sunday tidings from the front)
- Epitaph, a poem by Alexander Pope (A pleasing form, a firm, yet cautious mind)
- Epitaph, a poem by Percy Bysshe Shelley (These are two friends whose lives were undivided)
- "Epitaph", a poem by Elizabeth Sherwin
- Epitaph, a poem by William Carlos Williams (An old willow with hollow branches)
- "Epitaph", a poem by Anne Whitney
- Epitaph, a poem by Gabriello Chiabrera and translated by William Wordsworth (Perhaps some needful service of the State)
- Epitaph, a poem by Gabriello Chiabrera and translated by William Wordsworth (O Thou who movest onward with a mind)
- Epitaph, a poem by Gabriello Chiabrera and translated by William Wordsworth (There never breathed a man who when his life)
- Epitaph, a poem by Gabriello Chiabrera and translated by William Wordsworth (Destined to war from very infancy)
- Epitaph, a poem by Gabriello Chiabrera and translated by William Wordsworth (Not without heavy grief of heart did He)
- Epitaph, a poem by Gabriello Chiabrera and translated by William Wordsworth (Pause, courteous Spirit!—Balbi supplicates)